They are making a point that switching from 8k block size to 4k would reap performance benefits:

"When Oracle data is stored on FlashMAX devices, reducing Oracle database block size from the default value of 8192 bytes (8KB) to 4096 bytes (4KB) can provide substantial performance benefits in many applications. With HDDs, reading/writing 4KB takes essentially the same amount of time as 8KB as most of the time is spent on moving heads. In contrast, FlashMAX can perform 2x the amount of IOPS with 4KB block size compared to 8KB block size, or the same amount of IOPS at lower latencies."

They offered the steps on how to change your block size:

"You can set this parameter in several different ways:

By adding it to initORACLE_SID.ora file (or changing if the parameter already exists)

By setting the parameter in the SPFILE:

SQL>alter system set db_block_size=4096 scope=spfile;

SQL>shutdown immediate

SQL>startup

By setting it on Initialization Parameters -> Sizing tab of the DBCA"

Last I checked, you could only change the default block size at DB creation. Sure you can have multiple block sizes supported at the Tablespace level (must also specify cache sizes) but it's not as simple as changing a init parameter and bouncing your instance – otherwise, you will see: